Whitewashing the Democratic Party’s History

ill

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In honor of the OG conservative @KingpinOG I will post this article here today to combat the liberal brigade. :lolbron:

The less racist the South gets, the more Republican it becomes.
Here’s what the former president of the United States had to say when he eulogized his mentor, an Arkansas senator:

We come to celebrate and give thanks for the remarkable life of J. William Fulbright, a life that changed our country and our world forever and for the better. . . . In the work he did, the words he spoke and the life he lived, Bill Fulbright stood against the 20th century’s most destructive forces and fought to advance its brightest hopes.

So spoke President William J. Clinton in 1995 of a man was among the 99 Democrats in Congress to sign the “Southern Manifesto” in 1956. (Two Republicans also signed it.) The Southern Manifesto declared the signatories’ opposition to the Supreme Court’s decision in Brown v. Board of Education and their commitment to segregation forever. Fulbright was also among those who filibustered the Civil Rights Act of 1964. That filibuster continued for 83 days.

Speaking of the Civil Rights Act of 1964, let’s review (since they don’t teach this in schools): The percentage of House Democrats who supported the legislation? 61 percent. House Republicans? 80 percent. In the Senate, 69 percent of Democrats voted yes, compared with 82 percent of Republicans. (Barry Goldwater, a supporter of the NAACP, voted no because he thought it was unconstitutional.)

When he was running for president in 2000, Vice President Al Gore told the NAACP that his father, Senator Al Gore Sr., had lost his Senate seat because he voted for the Civil Rights Act. Uplifting story — except it’s false. Gore Sr. voted against the Civil Rights Act. He lost in 1970 in a race that focused on prayer in public schools, the Vietnam War, and the Supreme Court.

Al Gore’s reframing of the relevant history is the story of the Democratic party in microcosm. The party’s history is pockmarked with racism and terror. The Democrats were the party of slavery, black codes, Jim Crow, and that miserable terrorist excrescence, the Ku Klux Klan. Republicans were the party of Lincoln, Reconstruction, anti-lynching laws, and the civil rights acts of 1875, 1957, 1960, and 1964. Were all Republicans models of rectitude on racial matters? Hardly. Were they a heck of a lot better than the Democrats? Without question.

As recently as 2010, the Senate’s president pro tempore was former Ku Klux Klan Exalted Cyclops Robert Byrd (D., W.Va.). Rather than acknowledge their sorry history, modern Democrats have rewritten it.

The Democrats have been sedulously rewriting history for decades.
You may recall that when MSNBC was commemorating the 50th anniversary of segregationist George Wallace’s “Stand in the Schoolhouse Door” stunt to prevent the integration of the University of Alabama, the network identified Wallace as “R., Alabama.”

The Democrats have been sedulously rewriting history for decades. Their preferred version pretends that all the Democratic racists and segregationists left their party and became Republicans starting in the 1960s. How convenient. If it were true that the South began to turn Republican due to Lyndon Johnson’s passage of the Civil Rights Act, you would expect that the Deep South, the states most associated with racism, would have been the first to move. That’s not what happened. The first southern states to trend Republican were on the periphery: North Carolina, Virginia, Texas, Tennessee, and Florida. (George Wallace lost these voters in his 1968 bid.) The voters who first migrated to the Republican party were suburban, prosperous New South types. The more Republican the South has become, the less racist.

Is it unforgivable that Bill Clinton praised a former segregationist? No. Fulbright renounced his racist past, as did Robert Byrd and Al Gore Sr. It would be immoral and unjust to misrepresent the history.

What is unforgivable is the way Democrats are still using race to foment hatred. Remember what happened to Trent Lott when he uttered a few dumb words about former segregationist Strom Thurmond? He didn’t get the kind of pass Bill Clinton did when praising Fulbright. Earlier this month, Hillary Clinton told a mostly black audience that “what is happening is a sweeping effort to disempower and disenfranchise people of color, poor people and young people from one end of our country to another. . . . Today Republicans are systematically and deliberately trying to stop millions of American citizens from voting.” She was presumably referring to voter-ID laws, which, by the way, 51 percent of black Americans support.

Racism has an ugly past in the Democratic party. The accusation of racism has an ugly present.

http://www.nationalreview.com/article/420321/democratic-party-racist-history-mona-charen
 

superunknown23

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There are so many lies on this article... I thought about giving a rebuttal but it's like shooting fish in a barrel.
The GOP is in defense mode right now, trying to disassociate themselves from the confederate flag-waving Bubbas who make up their base (while counting on their votes nonetheless).
She's basically saying "yeah, we defend that flag now but we're not racist... The racists died before the GOP took over the South":russ:
I especially love how she conveniently dismissed Goldwater's vote against the 1964 CRA, his subsequent campaign on that vote and win in the deep South (while losing the rest of the country).

The funniest thing is how some conservatives claim that "Martin Luther King Jr was a republican". A man they hated when he was alive and called a "race-hustling communist":laugh:
Here's what MLK had to say when the GOP welcomed racist white southerners into their party in 1964 (by nominating Barry Goldwater for president three months after he voted against the Civil Rights Act):
"The Republican Party geared its appeal and program to racism, reaction, and extremism. All people of goodwill viewed with alarm and concern the frenzied wedding at the Cow Palace of the KKK with the radical right. The "best man" at this ceremony was a senator whose voting record, philosophy, and program were anathema to all the hard-won achievements of the past decade."
- Martin Luther King Jr, July 16, 1964 (after witnessing the GOP presidential convention)
The GOP share of the black vote dropped from 34 percent for Nixon in 1960 to just 4 percent for Goldwater in 1964. That's when they lost the black vote for good.
King voted for JFK and LBJ too. He was also murdered while organizing a UNION protest (we all know how much republicans love unions)....:heh:
 

Pesci

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Of course the National Review would say this

Which party has mounted challenges to the Voting Rights Act? Which party has members that still oppose the Civil Rights Act of 1964? Which party is still actively trying to disenfranchise minority voters? I'll hang up and listen
 

Pesci

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quote please
It's from a Rick Perlstein book. Reagan said about the shooting, "it's the sort of great tragedy when we begin compromising with law and order and people started choosing which laws they would break." He's referring to civil disobedience.
 

superunknown23

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quote please
When Martin Luther King was buried in Atlanta, the live television coverage lasted seven and a half hours. President Johnson announced a national day of mourning. But white conservatives, who despised him when he was alive, couldn't stop criticizing the extensive coverage.
South Carolina GOP Sen. Strom Thurmond wrote his constituents, ”We are now witnessing the whirlwind sowed years ago when some preachers and teachers began telling people that each man could be his own judge in his own case.
Ronald Reagan, the GOP governor of California, argued that King had it coming. He said it was just the sort of “great tragedy that began when we began compromising with law and order, and people started choosing which laws they’d break.
It's no surprise that Reagan opposed the MLK holiday in 1983. He saw him as nothing but an irrelevant troublemaker. Thankfully, the democratic Congress passed the MLK Holiday bill with a veto-proof majority (all 22 "no" votes in the Senate came from republicans).

Quotes from William Buckley, National Review founder and widely considered as the GOP's greatest so-called "intellectual":
I am convinced that Martin Luther King belongs behind bars along with everyone else who conspires to break the law.”
If the entire Negro population in the South were suddenly given the vote and were to use it as a block and pursuant to directives handed down by some more demagogic Negro leaders, chaos would ensue.”
The central question that emerges … is whether the White community in the South is entitled to take such measures as are necessary to prevail, politically and culturally, in areas in which it does not prevail numerically? The sobering answer is Yes - the White community is so entitled because, for the time being, it is the advanced race. It is not easy, and it is unpleasant, to adduce statistics evidencing the cultural superiority of White over Negro: but it is a fact that obtrudes, one that cannot be hidden by ever-so-busy egalitarians and anthropologists.”

*After the Birmingham church bombing:

"Let us gently say the fiend who set off the bomb does not have the sympathy of the white population in the South; in fact, he set back the cause of the white people there so dramatically as to raise the question whether in fact the explosion was the act of a provocateur — of a Communist, or of a crazed Negro.
And let it be said that the convulsions that go on, and are bound to continue, have resulted from revolutionary assaults on the status quo, and a contempt for the law, which are traceable to the Supreme Court’s manifest contempt for the settled traditions of Constitutional practice. Certainly it now appears that Birmingham’s Negroes will never be content so long as the white population is free to be free
."

*After MLK was assassinated:

The martyrdom [King] seemed sometimes almost to be seeking may commend him to history and to God, but not likely to Scarsdale, New York, which has never credited the charge that the white community of America conspires to ensure the wretchedness of brothers of Martin Luther King . . .”
MLK had this to say about CA governor Reagan...:salute:
"The war has strengthened domestic reaction. It has given the extreme right, the anti-labor, anti-Negro, and anti-humanistic forces a weapon of spurious patriotism to galvanize its supporters into reaching for power, right up to the White House. It hopes to use national frustration to take control and restore the America of social insecurity and power for the privileged. When a Hollywood performer, lacking distinction even as an actor can become a leading war hawk candidate for the Presidency, only the irrationalities induced by a war psychosis can explain such a melancholy turn of events."
- Martin Luther King Jr, Nov 1967
 

Domingo Halliburton

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On a side note didn't some just expose the national review for being a racist rag?

@tmonster perhaps

he's the worst debater on here, don't bring him into this...

its worse than @napolean somehow...the line between the knowledge he's kicking and what he thinks he's kicking is very thick.
 
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